Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09BUENOSAIRES304
2009-03-18 13:15:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Buenos Aires
Cable title:  

ARGENTINA: RESPONSE TO DOL LIST OF GOODS BELIEVED TO BE

Tags:  ELAB KTIP PHUM EAGR EINV ETRD SOCI AR 
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RUEHNG RUEHNL RUEHQU RUEHRD RUEHRG RUEHRS RUEHTM RUEHVC
DE RUEHBU #0304/01 0771315
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
O 181315Z MAR 09
FM AMEMBASSY BUENOS AIRES
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC IMMEDIATE 3332
RUEHC/DEPT OF LABOR WASHINGTON DC IMMEDIATE
INFO RUEHWH/WESTERN HEMISPHERIC AFFAIRS DIPL POSTS
RUEHAB/AMEMBASSY ABIDJAN 0009
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RUEHBE/AMEMBASSY BELMOPAN 0009
RUEHEK/AMEMBASSY BISHKEK 0012
RUEHEG/AMEMBASSY CAIRO 0042
RUEHRY/AMEMBASSY CONAKRY 0015
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RUEHMO/AMEMBASSY MOSCOW 0790
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RHEHAAA/NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL WASHINGTON DC
RUCPDOC/DEPT OF COMMERCE WASHINGTON DC
RUEHRC/DEPT OF AGRICULTURE WASHINGTON DC
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 06 BUENOS AIRES 000304 

DOL FOR ILAB CHARITA CASTRO AND LEYLA STROTKAMP
DEPT FOR DRL/ILCSR MARK MITTELHAUSER
G/TIP FOR STEVE STEINER

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ELAB KTIP PHUM EAGR EINV ETRD SOCI AR
SUBJECT: ARGENTINA: RESPONSE TO DOL LIST OF GOODS BELIEVED TO BE
MADE WITH FORCED OR CHILD LABOR

REF: A. STATE 16596

B. STATE 1730

C. BUENOS AIRES 0048

D. 2/24/09 Castro-Gomez e-mail

BUENOS AIR 00000304 001.2 OF 006


UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 06 BUENOS AIRES 000304

DOL FOR ILAB CHARITA CASTRO AND LEYLA STROTKAMP
DEPT FOR DRL/ILCSR MARK MITTELHAUSER
G/TIP FOR STEVE STEINER

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: ELAB KTIP PHUM EAGR EINV ETRD SOCI AR
SUBJECT: ARGENTINA: RESPONSE TO DOL LIST OF GOODS BELIEVED TO BE
MADE WITH FORCED OR CHILD LABOR

REF: A. STATE 16596

B. STATE 1730

C. BUENOS AIRES 0048

D. 2/24/09 Castro-Gomez e-mail

BUENOS AIR 00000304 001.2 OF 006



1. THIS CABLE IS SENSITIVE BUT UNCLASSIFIED. NOT FOR INTERNET
DISTRIBUTION.


2. This is an action request. See para 3.

SUMMARY/COMMENT
--------------


3. (SBU) Below please find post's response to ref A's request for
additional information on the Department of Labor's list of goods
believed to be made with forced or child labor. Embassy queried the
International Labor Organization (ILO),GOA, and NGO contacts for
specific examples to back up claims of child and forced labor and
found that their allegations are based on very few specific cases.
ILO also praised cooperative public-private programs underway to
eliminate child labor. Based on our conversation with the ILO, post
recommends that lemons should be removed from the list, as the
overwhelming majority of the lemon harvest has been certified as
free of forced and child labor for export to the EU. According to
our agro-industry contacts, sugar should also be taken off of the
list, since the industry is highly mechanized. As noted earlier,
Post requests that the Department of Labor not cite the Embassy as a
source when publishing its list, given host government sensitivities
to this reporting. The public sources cited in ref D should be used
instead as post deems them more authoritative. In addition, post
would appreciate the Department of Labor providing advanced
notification of the list's publication along with press guidance to
use locally.


BUENOS AIR 00000304 002.2 OF 006



4. (SBU) We are also concerned that publication of the list as
currently envisioned will be counterproductive, reinforcing deeply
ingrained Argentine views about U.S. unilateralism and didacticism
and provoking the GOA into a counterproductive withdrawal of its
cooperation with us on the eradication of forced and child labor.

Prior to the publication of this list, we believe that the
interagency community should consider whether this new round of
diplomacy by report card is truly effective in reaching our goal of
a world free of forced and child labor. Instead of singling out
developing countries like Argentina for problems they are trying to
address, the USG should take steps to increase significantly
bilateral assistance to strengthen efforts to combat the problem.
Even if we need to publish such a list, we should 1) find a way to
recognize efforts governments are making to end these practices; and
2) offer assistance programs to willing governments. Absent this,
we may well just perpetuate the image of a nagging, rich Uncle Sam
who is unwilling to really help fix the problem. End
Summary/Comment.

AGRO-INDUSTRY CONTACTS: CHILD LABOR OCCURS BUT OUTSIDE
OF SCHOOL HOURS
-------------- --------------


5. (SBU) In reviewing the sources found in ref D, we noted that the
sources indicated a significant incidence of child labor in
agricultural production including: yerba, garlic, blueberries,
cotton, grapes, lemons, olives, sugar, strawberries, tobacco, and
tomatoes. According to agro-industry contacts, children in rural
areas of Argentina are involved in the production and harvesting of
many crops, but it is questionable whether that involvement should
be considered significant, or whether it should be considered child
labor. These contacts maintain that many children work in the
harvest alongside their families outside of school hours or during
their summer vacation, much like many children in the United States

BUENOS AIR 00000304 003.2 OF 006


have done for decades. In particular, sugar industry contacts assert
that child labor is not a problem in their industry, as 85 percent
of the sugar harvest is fully mechanized, 14 percent is
semi-mechanized, and only one percent is fully manual.

ILO: SIGNIFICANT INCIDENCE OF CHILD LABOR IN AG SECTOR
-------------- --------------


6. (SBU) ILO official Gustavo Ponce, however, maintains that child
labor is prevalent in the production of most agricultural goods,
although he acknowledged that there are no comprehensive statistics
on the matter. Embassy notes that ILO, GOA (which only admits to
the incidence of child labor in the tomato and strawberry
industries),and NGO claims of child and forced labor are based on
very few specific cases and lack credible, serious substantiation.
Post is pressing these organizations for specific examples to back
up their allegations. Ponce explained that in the ILO's work to
prevent and eradicate child labor with the Argentine Ministry of
Labor's National Commission to Eradicate Child Labor (CONAETI) and
its provincial counterparts (COPRETIs),many COPRETIs have conducted
field studies to determine the incidence of child labor in
agricultural production. Although these studies have not quantified
the number of child laborers working in a particular industry, they
have found that a significant amount of child labor takes place in
the production of bricks and the agricultural goods listed in ref D.
Ponce said, however, that there was not a significant incidence of
child labor in lemons, since the overwhelming majority of the lemon
harvest has been certified as free of forced and child labor as a
condition of their export to the European Union.


7. (SBU) Ponce claimed that child laborers worked for farms owned
by third parties during school hours. He mentioned that part of the
reason why children worked on these farms is because the
agricultural sector pays by the bushel instead of per hour, thus

BUENOS AIR 00000304 004.2 OF 006


creating an incentive for an entire family, including children, to
assist with the harvest. He also mentioned that many of the people
who work on these farms are migrant laborers with few social
resources in the communities where they work that would enable them
to drop off their children with relatives or friends for childcare.
As a result, these families choose to bring their children to the
farms where they put them to work. Ponce also noted a widespread
social and cultural acceptance of child labor in certain regional
agricultural economies. He claimed that in Jujuy province (which
borders Bolivia in the northwest of Argentina),they've encountered
cases where teachers were marking children as "present" when in
fact, the children were working on the harvest.

ILO PRAISES GOA EFFORTS TO ERADICATE CHILD LABOR
-------------- ---


8. (SBU) Ponce noted the excellent ongoing cooperation between the
ILO, CONAETI, and the COPRETIs. He praised CONAETI's public-private
partnership to advance policies to eliminate child labor.
Established in 2007, the Corporate Network for the Eradication of
Child Labor includes 63 prominent Argentine companies, including the
tobacco and cotton chambers of industry. The Network, along with
CONAETI and the Ministry of Labor, meet every two months to discuss
its development plan. In November 2008, CONAETI, the Ministry of
Labor, and the Network organized a conference on "The Role of the
Media in the Prevention and Eradication of Child Labor." The ILO is
presenting the initiative as a best practice in an upcoming regional
conference in Uruguay in the hopes of implementing the initiative
elsewhere in the region. More information can be found at:
http://www.trabajo.gov.ar/
conaeti/institucional/
infantil.htm

Other public-private initiatives include ILO's efforts to work with

BUENOS AIR 00000304 005.2 OF 006


the tobacco industry to offer training to employees on how to
identify and prevent child labor.


9. (SBU) Ponce also described as positive a CONAETI/Ministry of
Education initiative to provide scholarships to reintegrate children
who have dropped out of school to work, and supports children who
work and attend school. The program also provides children's parents
with job-search assistance and job training. In 2008, 5,000
children and adolescents received scholarships. Labor inspectors
have referred another 29,000 children and adolescents to the
program. CONAETI indicates that these children are in the process
of receiving scholarships for the next school year. More
information on the program can be found at:
http://www.me.gov.ar/todosaestudiar/

COMMENT: MORE CARROTS, LESS STICKS
--------------

10. (SBU) The GOA continues to work towards the eradication of
child and forced labor. Post is concerned that publication of this
list will provoke a counterproductive reaction from the GOA. Our
public reports on a broad range of issues have reinforced the view
here among the Argentine public that the USG sets itself up
unilaterally as police officer, judge, and jury on GOA conduct and
that, however much Argentines try, their best is never good enough
for us. At best, the list's publication will elicit an angry public
response by the GOA. At worst, it may provoke official resistance
to our efforts to strengthen bilateral cooperation in this area.
Prior to the publication of this list, the interagency community
should consider seriously whether this new round of diplomacy by
report card is truly effective in reaching our goal of a world free
of forced and child labor. Instead of singling out countries like
Argentina for problems they are trying to address, the USG should
consider seriously redoubling bilateral assistance to strengthen
efforts to combat the problem. We should also find ways to include

BUENOS AIR 00000304 006.2 OF 006


praise for governments with active programs that are trying to
eliminate forced and child labor, even with the limited resources
available to them. Post welcomes learning what plans DOL may have
to provide bilateral assistance to governments who are trying to
fight forced and child labor. We look forward to hearing views from
our colleagues at other posts.
WAYNE